Background and Field of Invention
[0001] The present invention relates to engine diagnostics, and more particularly to apparatus
for monitoring events in the combustion chamber of an internal combustion engine by
means of microwave energy injected into the chamber. Yet more specifically, the invention
relates to an adapter for coupling both microwave and spark energy into the combustion
chamber of a gasoline engine through an engine spark plug.
[0002] It has heretofore been proposed to inject microwave energy into the combustion chamber
of a gasoline engine, and to monitor the microwave signal for identifying and diagnosing
engine timing events, etc. The U.S. patents to Merlo 3,589,177 and 3,703,825 disclose
an adapter for coupling both microwave and spark energy into the combustion chamber
of a gasoline engine through an engine spark plug. The Merlo adapter includes a waveguide
and a coaxial transmission line extending transversely through the waveguide to the
spark plug in a generally T-shaped configuration. Spark energy is transmitted to the
spark plug by the center conductor of the coax transmission portion of the adapter
which extends transversely through the waveguide and is surrounded by an insulator.
Microwave energy transmitted through the waveguide is coupled to the center conductor
through the dielectric, and thereby to the combustion chamber through the spark plug
conduction path and spark electrodes.
[0003] Spark plugs which have come into conventional and widespread use in recent years
include a section of high resistance material (believed to be refractory material)
or the like electrically separating the spark plug input terminal from the spark electrodes
so as to inhibit passage of rf noise, etc. in the reverse direction from the electrodes
to the spark plug leads. A significant disadvantage of the Merlo spark plug adapter
previously described lies in the fact that it can operate, if at all, only at greately
reduced efficiency with such conventional spark plugs due to the fact that the Merlo
adapter relies upon transmission of the microwave energy in the so-called coaxial
TEM transmission mode through a spark plug conduction path from the input terminal
to the electrodes. An important object of the present invention is to provide an adapter
for coupling microwave energy into an engine combustion chamber through a spark plug
which does not rely upon the spark plug terminal and conduction path, and which thereby
avoids problems associated with the section of high resistance material in conventional
spark plugs previously described. Brief Description of the Drawings
[0004] The invention, together with additional objects, features and advantages thereof,
will be best understood from the following description, the appended claims and the
accompanying drawings in which:
FIG. 1 is a fragmentary partially sectioned and partially schematic view of the spark
plug adapter in accordance with the present invention;
FIG. 2 is an elevational end view of the adapter illustrated in FIG. 1 with spark
plug lead removed;
FIGS. 3 and 4 are sectional views of respective modified spark plug adapters which
embody the principles of the invention; and
FIG. 5 is a fragmented sectional view taken along the line 5-5 in FIG. 4.
Detailed Description of the Preferred Embodiments
[0005] Referring to FIG. 1, a conventional spark plug 10 includes a metal shell 12 adapted
at one end 13 to be threaded into an opening in an engine block 14 within the engine
combustion chamber. A ceramic insulator housing 18 is carried by shell 12 and encompasses
a sectioned spark plug electrode conductor 20. A section 22 of high resistance material
such as a refractory metal is disposed in series with sections of electrode conductor
20 so as to suppress rf emissions as previously described. A spark plug input terminal
24 projects axially from insulator housing 18 and is adapted to be connected to a
spark plug lead 26 from a distributor or the like (not shown) for feeding spark energy
to spark electrodes 16.
[0006] The spark plug adapter in accordance with the present invention as illustrated in
FIGS. 1 and 2 comprises a cylindrical sleeve 28 having an opening 30 at one end adapted
to be received over spark plug insulator housing 18 with spark plug lead 26 removed
therefrom. Most preferably, opening 30 is internally contoured to complement the contour
of the spark plug insulator housing and terminal 24, and is snugly received over the
insulator housing to promote transmission of microwave energy from the sleeve to the
housing. An annular lip 32 within opening 30 is adapted to be received by snap fit
into a corresponding recess on the spark plug terminal so that sleeve 28 is firmly
mounted on the spark plug. Preferably, sleeve 28 is constructed of TEFLON or other
resiliently flexible insulating material. A connector 34 is mounted on an end of sleeve
28 remote from opening 30, and includes an insulator body 36 of ceramic or the like
having a tapering neck 38 extending into and adhered within a corresponding opening
39 in sleeve 28. An electrical conductor 40 extends through insulator body 36 and
terminates at 42 within sleeve 28 at a position adapted when sleeve 28 is received
over a spark plug of conventional size to be separated or spaced axially from plug
terminal 24 by an air gap 44. Externally of insulator body 36, conductor 40 terminates
in a terminal 46 adapted to removably receive the spark plug cable 26 so that spark
energy will be transmitted from cable 26 through conductor 40 across air gap 44 and
then through spark plug 10 to the combustion chamber.
[0007] A microwave antenna 48 is mounted externally of sleeve 28 near the open end thereof
that is adapted to be telescoped over spark plug 10, so that the antenna is positioned
in assembly with a spark plug radially adjacent spark plug insulator housing 18. Preferably,
antenna 48 comprises a square loop antenna consisting on two adjacent sides 50, 52
of the center conductor 54 of a section of coax cable 56, and on the opposing adjacent
sides 58, 60 of the cable ground conductor or shield 61, the center conductor and
shield being electrically connected at the free ends of loop sides 50, 60. Loop antenna
48 is affixed to sleeve 28 by having one side 50 mounted to or embedded in the outer
sleeve surface in an orientation parallel to the axis of sleeve 28; and thus parallel
to-the axis of spark plug 10, so that loop 48 is effectively disposed in a plane parallel
to the sleeve and spark plug axes. Remotely of antenna 48, coax cable 56 is coupled
through a coax adapter 64 such as a Hewlett
Packard coax adapter Model X281
A to a microwave transceiver 62 such as a Microwave Associates "
Gunnplexer
" Model MA-87141-1. Adapter 64 is insulated from transceiver 62 by a sheet 68 of insulating
material such as cellophane. Sheet 68 extends across waveguide cavity 70 in adapter
64 and transceiver 62 for blocking the d.c. high energy signal induced in loop 48
by the spark signal to plug 10. Adapter 64 is mounted to transceiver 62 by insulating
screws 72 of nylon, for example. The input and output terminals of transceiver 62,
which includes microwave source and detection means, are coupled to engine diagnostic
circuitry 66, one example of which is shown in the above-referenced Merlo patents.
[0008] In operation, microwave energy is injected into the engine combustion chamber from
antenna 48 through sleeve 28 and spark plug insulator housing 18, thereby effectively
avoiding the high resistance presented by spark plug section 22. Stated differently,
and in accordance with a critical and distinguishing feature of the present invention
in its broadest aspects, insulation sleeve 28 and spark plug insulation housing 18
cooperate for direct transmission or coupling of microwave energy into the engine
cylinder avoiding or substantially avoiding the spark plug conduction path and spark
electrodes. That is to say that the spark plug conduction path plays no substantial
role in transmission of microwave energy into the engine cylinder. Thus, the adapter
of the invention functions in the so-called waveguide transmission mode, as distinguished
from the so-called coaxial TEM transmission mode characteristic of the above-noted
Merlo prior art, and thereby avoids the consequent difficulties encountered with the
prior art and discussed hereinabove.
[0009] Transmission of microwave energy to spark plug lead 26 is effectively inhibited by
air gap 44. In one working embodiment of the invention wherein the microwave frequency
is ten gigahertz, gap 44 may range in axial dimension between 0.025 and 0.250 inch,
and- - preferably is on the order of substantially 0.050 inch. The circumferential
dimension of loop antenna 48 is preferably equal to one wavelength of the selected
microwave frequency, although it is not known at this time whether such circumferential
dimension is critical to operation of the embodiment of FIGS. 1 and 2. Nominally,
loop 48 is coplanar with the coincident axes of sleeve 28 and spark plug 10, as best
seen in FIG. 2. A particular advantage of the square loop configuration in accordance
with FIGS. 1 and 2 lies in the fact that the plane of such loop may be manually adjusted
angularly with respect to the sleeve and spark plug axes, as shown in phantom in FIG.
2, empirically to obtain optimum coupling of microwave energy into the combustion
chamber.
[0010] The embodiment of the invention heretofore described is particularly useful for after-market
microwave analysis of engine operation in a service environment with the engine already
mounted in an automobile. In such an environment, the spark plug lead for a selected
cylinder may be-removed from the spark plug and the adapter sleeve 28 telescoped over
the selected spark plug as previously described. Resiliency of sleeve 28 facilitates
mounting and removal of the adapter. With lead 26 then coupled to adapter terminal
46, the engine may be operated without noticeable effect attributable to the microwave
diagnostic equipment and adapter. Under some circumstances the adapter may be equipped
with its own spark plug received in sleeve 28, so that in a test environment the engine
spark plug is removed and replaced by the adapter with test spark plug. It may also
be possible under some circumstances to eliminate adapter connector 34 and to provide
a shortened sleeve 28 of sufficient length for mounting antenna 48 over spark plug
insulator housing 18. For such a modification, spark plug lead 26 may be connected
directly to spark plug terminal 24.
[0011] FIGS. 3-5 illustrate modified spark plug adapters which embody the principles of
the invention. The adapter 100 of
FI
G. 3 is a so-called cold adapter for use where spark energy is not to be supplied to
the cylinder under test. Adapter 100 includes a hollow internally threaded metal tube
102 having a plug 104 of insulating material threadably received in one end. Plug
104 has an internal cavity 106 contoured snugly to receive at least the insulator
housing 18 of the spark plug 10. A microwave tuning assembly 108 comprises a metal
core 109 threadably received in an opposing end of tube 102 and having a passage 110
extending longitudinally therethrough parallel to but laterally offset from the axis
of core 109 and tube 102. An insulated conductor 112 is received in passage 110 and
projects from core 109 internally of tube 102 in the air space or cavity between core
109 and plug 104 to form a linear microwave antenna 114. Conductor 112 is connected
internally of core 109 through a lateral passage 116 to a coaxial connector li8 for
receiving microwave energy from a source as in FIG. 1. A knurled jam nut 120 is threaded
onto core 109, and a handle 122 is formed integrally with the core.
[0012] The second modified adapter 130 shown in FIGS. 4 and 5 is adapted for so-called hot
operation where spark energy is to be applied to the spark plug during test, as in
the embodiment of FIGS. 1 and 2 previously discussed. In adapter 130, a hollow sleeve
or plug 134 of insulating material is threadably received into one end of a metal
tube 132 and internally contoured at 136 snugly to receive a spark plug insulator
housing as previously described. A tuning assembly 138 includes a metal core 140 threaded
into tube 132. An insulated conductor 142 extends from a coax connector 144 through
a passage 146 in core 140 to terminate in a three-sided open loop antenna 148 of generally
square contour in the air cavity within tube 132 between core 140 and plug 134. The
plane of antenna 148 is tangential to the axis of adapter 130. A jam nut 150 is threaded
into core 140. Spark energy is fed from a terminal 152 on core 140 adapted for connection
to a spark plug wire (FIG. 1) through sliding telescoped brass conductors 154, 156
to a cap 158 adapted to be received over a spark plug terminal. Conductor 154 is carried
within core 140 by the sliding insulator elements 160, 162.
[0013] In each of the modifications of FIGS. 3-5, microwave energy is radiated in the transverse
magnetic mode from the antenna (114 in FIG. 3, 148 in FIGS. 4 and 5) through an air
space and through a plug of insulating material (104 in FIG. 3, 134 in FIG. 4) into
the spark plug insulator housing. The energy is then transmitted through the insulator
housing into the cylinder under test bypassing the spark plug conductive path and
electrodes. Thus, although the modifications of FIGS. 3-5 are different in detail
from the embodiment of FIGS. 1 and 2, the modified embodiments embody the general
principle of the invention whereby microwave energy is transmitted in the waveguide
transmission mode into and through the spark plug insulator housing, and thence into
the engine cylinder, while substantially bypassing the conduction path for spark energy.
The details of adapters of FIGS 3-5 are not the subject of this application.
1. An adapter for coupling microwave energy into a combustion chamber of an internal
combustion engine through a spark plug (10) of the type which includes an insulator
housing (18) and a spark conduction path (20, 22), characterized by first means (28;
102, 104; 132, 134) adapted to be removably and snugly received over the spark plug
insulator housing (18) and a microwave antenna (48, 114, 148) mounted on said first
means and adapted to be coupled to a source of microwave energy (62) for transmitting
said microwave energy through said first means and through the spark plug insulator
housing into the engine chamber independently of said conduction path (20, 22).
2. An adapter set forth in claim 1 for coupling both microwave and spark energy into
the combustion chamber of an internal combustion engine the spark plug (10) having
a terminal (24) extending axially from the housing (18) for connection to a spark
plug lead (26), characterized in that said first means including a member (28, 104,
134) constructed of insulating material having a bore (30, 106, 136) at one end adapted
to be removably received over the spark plug insulator housing (18) such that the
spark plug terminal (24) is positioned within said bore, second means (34, 138) can
led by said first means spaced from said one end and including conductive means (40;
152, 154, 156, 158) adapted removably to receive a spark plug lead (26) and extending
into said bore (30, 136) so as to be electrically connected to the spark plug terminal
(24) when said member is received over the insulator housing (18), the antenna (48,
148) being designed so as to transmit said microwave energy in a waveguide transmission
mode through said member and through said insulator housing into the engine combustion
chamber.
3. An adapter set forth in claim 2, characterized in that the spark plug (10) having
spark electrodes (16) at one end, said end being adapted to be threaded into an engine
(14) so that the spark electrodes project into the combustion chamber, said first
means comprising an electrical terminal sleeve (28, 104, 134) surrounding said insulator
housing (18) such that said electrical terminal (24) is disposed within said sleeve;
and the microwave antenna (48, 114, 148) being carried externally of said sleeve and
adapted for transmitting microwave energy through said sleeve.
4. The adapter set forth in claim 1, 2 or 3, characterized in that said microwave
antenna comprises a loop antenna (48, 148).
5. The adapter set forth in claim 4, characterized in that said antenna comprises
a square loop antenna (48) having one loop side mounted parallel to the axis of the
spark plug.
6. The adapter set forth in claim 5, characterized in that said plane of said antenna
(48) is angularly adjustable with respect to said axis (Fig.2).
7. The adapter set forth in claim 5 or 6; characterized in that said square loop antenna
(48) has a loop dimension substantially equal to one the wavelength of the microwave
energy.
8. The adapter set forth in claim 2 or 3, characterized in that said conductive means
(40, 42; 154) is separated from said spark plug terminal (24) by a high- resistance
gap (44) so as to inhibit transmission of microwave energy to said spark plug lead
(26).
9. The adapter set forth in claim 8, characterized in that said gap comprises an air
gap (44) having a dimension in the range of 0,63 mm to 6,3 mm between said conductive
means and said spark plug terminal.
10. The adapter set forth in claim 9, characterized in that said dimension is substantially
equal to 1,27 mm.
11. The adapter set forth in claim 1, characterized in that said first means (28)
is constructed of a resiliently flexible insulating material and is adapted to be
received and retained by a snap fit over said spark plug insulator housing (18) and
terminal (24).